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Spotlight
Hidden Physicists

The Game Designer

MAR 18, 2015
Ed Beach, Lead Game Designer, Firaxis Games
Ed Beach, Lead Game Designer, Firaxis Games

Photo courtesy of Ed Beach.

Photo courtesy of Ed Beach.

I remember clearly what first spurred me to be a physics major in college. It was watching Carl Sagan’s television series Cosmos: A Personal Voyage. Never before had I realized the size and beauty of the universe and the fragility of our position within it. I spent a lot of time writing college application essays during my senior year of high school, and many of them discussed themes from Cosmos.

One year later I was in the advanced freshman physics track at Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire. In one of our lab assignments we were asked to create software that could compute orbital trajectories around stars and planets. I soon realized that my true calling was creating computer models, often of physical systems, but not exclusively. My major evolved into “computer science modified with physics,” with a few astronomy courses thrown in for good measure.

With this background I was fortunate enough to start my career by developing software that supported the mission of the Hubble Space Telescope, managed out of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center. After 10 years supporting Goddard’s scientific missions, I moved on to the telecommunications industry and wrote software that modeled the propagation of cellular signals and microwaves for companies setting up new wireless networks. Once again, a strong background in physics combined with knowledge of how to model physical systems on the computer proved invaluable

However, I had one more interest that had not surfaced in my professional career: a love of history. My passion has always been playing detailed historical strategy games, so in 1999 I made a move into the computer game industry. That path led me to Firaxis Games, where I have led the design of the game Civilization V for the past three years. The game starts 6,000 years ago, when humankind was founding its first cities. Step by step, a player’s people advance through history, replicating many of the key scientific discoveries highlighted by Sagan in Cosmos.

In developing the gameplay and artificial intelligence systems for complex strategy games I am constantly creating small computer models that capture the behaviors needed to depict population growth, food consumption, or rates of scientific progress. I have also been able to acknowledge some of my favorite accomplishments in world history; [pullquote]it’s no coincidence that launching the Hubble Space Telescope is one of the best ways to win a scientific victory in Civilization V.[/pullquote]

This year, I watched with interest as Neil deGrasse Tyson launched his Cosmos sequel, A Spacetime Odyssey. As the television series tracked the course of scientific discovery and showed images from the Hubble Space Telescope, I reflected on my career path and how it all started with physics.

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